A string winder doesn’t need a review this long, and it doesn’t deserve one either. It’s a plastic or metal crank that turns a tuning peg faster than your fingers can, which matters more on the road than at home, since a broken string on tour or on a plane connection often means a change done fast, in a green room or an airport lounge, not at leisure on a workbench. Here are the two worth carrying.
| Winder | Extras | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| D’Addario Pro-Winder | Built-in cutter and bridge pin puller | One tool instead of three in your gig bag |
| Ernie Ball Pegwinder Plus | Bridge pin puller, ball-bearing action | The smoothest turning action of the two |
D’Addario Pro-Winder

This is the one to pack if you want to leave the wire cutters and bridge pin pliers at home. The winder, a hardened steel string cutter and a bridge pin puller are built into a single handle, so a full acoustic restring is one tool rather than three rattling around your case. Owners rate the cutter highly for a clean snip on new strings, though several note the winder mechanism is stiff out of the box until you loosen the retaining screw slightly, a five-second fix rather than a real flaw.
Ernie Ball Pegwinder Plus
No built-in cutter here, just a dedicated winder with a bridge pin puller and a genuinely smooth ball-bearing action that beats the cheaper plastic winders most players start with. It’s the one to choose if you already carry cutters separately and just want the fastest, smoothest crank on the peg itself. The trade-off is you’re carrying an extra tool for cutting strings that the D’Addario above builds in.
Frequently asked questions
Do I really need a string winder, or is it fine to just use my fingers?
Fingers work fine at home when you’ve got time. A winder earns its keep when you’re restringing quickly between soundchecks or flights, since winding six pegs by hand adds up to genuine minutes and wrist fatigue you don’t need before a set.
Will a string winder work on locking tuners?
Yes, both winders here fit standard and locking tuning pegs. The crank head is a simple universal notch shape that grips the peg regardless of the locking mechanism underneath.
The bottom line
Buy the D’Addario Pro-Winder if you want fewer tools in your case, buy the Ernie Ball Pegwinder Plus if you already have cutters and just want the smoothest crank going. Either one costs less than a single spare string set and pays for itself the first time you’re restringing against a departure gate clock.
